I scrimped and saved and was able to buy this beauty over the weekend.... on sale.... new!
It's a Roland HP 704 (which just came out on the market in April of this year). It looks like an acoustic upright, especially when I close the lid just enough to hide the digital display, but the key-bed action and speaker system make it feel and sound amazingly like an acoustic concert grand piano.
It's a big upgrade from my previous digital piano that we'd owned for 13 years- a Roland FP 5. That one now belongs to my niece who had been wanting a portable digital with full 88 weighted keys, touch-sensitivity and damper pedal with half-pedal capabilities (all of which it has/is). In spite of it's age, it's still in great condition and she's very happy with it.
And I am so happy with mine, too...... only I now have to up my damper pedaling technique, which this new piano with it's very realistic harmonic resonance capability has revealed to me is quite pitifully and embarrassingly lacking! Ack! lol The FP 5 spoiled me rotten in that department. I could keep its damper pedal depressed without ever lifting my foot throughout the entirety of every song I played without the sounds colliding and getting muddy, but not so with this beauty. If I'm not listening closely and being mindful of releasing the damper pedal with every chord change (like how one would normally do on a real piano), it shows me absolutely no mercy!
So... guess what I've been doing the past recent hours......watching every pedaling technique video on Youtube and practicing..... and oh my goodness! It's like how it was back when I was learning stick-shift on a car! Songs that I'd memorized and had been able to play so beautifully with smoothness are now stalling everywhere.....just like what my car did when I was learning stick-shift. lol
Things are looking hopeful that it's starting to sink in, though.....after many awkward stalls and starts this morning, I was finally able to kinda sorta stumble my way through most of Moonlight Sonata without too much cacophony going on and getting out of hand. On my FP5 I had progressed this year to being able to play Moonlight from memory smoothly without a hitch, and with my eyes closed at that, but to have heard me earlier this morning, one would have thought I was just learning it for the first time! lol It was pretty pathetic, I must confess.
Well, back to the grindstone! I am determined to get this pedaling business ingrained enough so that it eventually becomes as natural to me as driving stick-shift.
IrishLass
It's a Roland HP 704 (which just came out on the market in April of this year). It looks like an acoustic upright, especially when I close the lid just enough to hide the digital display, but the key-bed action and speaker system make it feel and sound amazingly like an acoustic concert grand piano.
It's a big upgrade from my previous digital piano that we'd owned for 13 years- a Roland FP 5. That one now belongs to my niece who had been wanting a portable digital with full 88 weighted keys, touch-sensitivity and damper pedal with half-pedal capabilities (all of which it has/is). In spite of it's age, it's still in great condition and she's very happy with it.
And I am so happy with mine, too...... only I now have to up my damper pedaling technique, which this new piano with it's very realistic harmonic resonance capability has revealed to me is quite pitifully and embarrassingly lacking! Ack! lol The FP 5 spoiled me rotten in that department. I could keep its damper pedal depressed without ever lifting my foot throughout the entirety of every song I played without the sounds colliding and getting muddy, but not so with this beauty. If I'm not listening closely and being mindful of releasing the damper pedal with every chord change (like how one would normally do on a real piano), it shows me absolutely no mercy!
So... guess what I've been doing the past recent hours......watching every pedaling technique video on Youtube and practicing..... and oh my goodness! It's like how it was back when I was learning stick-shift on a car! Songs that I'd memorized and had been able to play so beautifully with smoothness are now stalling everywhere.....just like what my car did when I was learning stick-shift. lol
Things are looking hopeful that it's starting to sink in, though.....after many awkward stalls and starts this morning, I was finally able to kinda sorta stumble my way through most of Moonlight Sonata without too much cacophony going on and getting out of hand. On my FP5 I had progressed this year to being able to play Moonlight from memory smoothly without a hitch, and with my eyes closed at that, but to have heard me earlier this morning, one would have thought I was just learning it for the first time! lol It was pretty pathetic, I must confess.
Well, back to the grindstone! I am determined to get this pedaling business ingrained enough so that it eventually becomes as natural to me as driving stick-shift.
IrishLass